Wednesday, January 29, 2014

soul food

You might remember my life-changing service event from The Gathering in the summer of 2012, where our group was served food by members of the New Orleans cooking school. Kevin, the man in charge, said, "We love our food here, but we know what's important. It's not what's on the table that matters, but who's at the table. It's about sharing a meal together."

That quote, and the experience of being served as a service project, changed my perspective on everything. On eating, which is a way I spend a lot of my time, and on service, and on sharing gifts with other people.

This past weekend was the ELCA Delaware-Maryland Synod's annual high school youth retreat, which last year got me thinking about reformation. This year, the theme was soul food.

And if I learned anything this weekend, it is that I am hungry.

Food, and eating, has been a major source of unrest since I left college. Maybe more than any other "figuring out" I've had to do, the eating, eating affordably, eating on time, eating healthy, and eating things that don't make me feel ill has been an almost constant obstacle course in this adult life.

So I am intimately familiar with the significance of food, and how closely it is tied to emotional and mental well-being. It is an apt and long-lived metaphor for spirituality.

At the retreat we talked about the different things we can be hungry for. We talked about food shortages, food deserts, and the host of social issues that tend to accompany hunger and poverty. We talked about satisfying our hunger, about the church's response to hunger in our communities, and about the different ways we can feed our own hunger, the different ways we find spiritual fulfillment and relief.

As an anthropologist I know that church plays an important social role for individuals and communities. And so it was this weekend.


I was dreading the trip because, until Thursday night, I had been planning on driving down to Ocean City alone after work on Friday. But on Thursday night I bit the bullet and called my friend Abby to see if she wanted to carpool. We were both happy for the company, and we got to reconnect after not seeing each other in months.

She told me how she found a new church in the city whose congregation is mostly made up of young people, like us. Every single thing we talked about had to do with our social needs, fulfilled and unfulfilled - what we are hungry for.

Through the course of the weekend I realized that I have been lonely. There is something I have been missing, something I realized sharply at the Ole wedding in Kansas in December. I am missing community, and I found it at Roadtrip, kind of.


In the fall or late summer, my dad gave a sermon about our demands as a congregation, about the point of worship and the ways in which we give back. It was a tough sermon, but I liked it. It was about commitment. And the point that changed everything for me was when he said Worship is not for us. It is for God. We are saying we don't get anything out of worship, but shouldn't we be worried about what we're putting into it? About what we're giving to God? Anyone brave enough to say Amen to that?

He's right. Worship should be about God, however we go about it. Praise and prayer are about our relationship with God, and relationships are a two-way street.


But if we are hungry, how can we feed anyone else?

My friend Audrey told a story about being a camp counselor sending kids down a river and pulling them back out again. Her job was to pull them out on the other end. And, she said, if she went in too deep, she would lose her footing and both she and the campers would go sailing down the river. If she lost her footing, she couldn't rescue anyone else.

But what about when we are fed by our own feeding of others? What about at Roadtrip, when we find our spirits filled in the process of offering ourselves and our gifts to others? What about when we share a meal together, when we serve the fruits of our labor to another person and take the first bite together? This is community, and this is what I'm hungry for.

Our dinner on Saturday night was called the Agape meal, a meal of love. It was like Communion, beginning with the breaking of bread and ending with the pouring of "wine" (in this case, grape juice). There is a church in New York City that hosts this kind of sit-down Eucharist weekly. I talked with my small group (13 inspiring 10th-graders) about the difference between sitting together and talking with other people, and eating together with other people. For a multitude of reasons, it brings us closer together.

And indeed, after the meal our group found its stride, a deeper level of trust and rapport.


J and I have our routines, the order of operations for holidays (whose parents' house we go to at what point in the day, and where we eat our different meals). We usually eat dinner at his parents' house on Sunday nights, and at my parents' house on Mondays. His family dinners begin with everyone crossing themselves and reciting the same prayer: Bless us O Lord, and these our gifts which we are about to receive... My family starts by holding hands, and singing. (If I reach for my neighbors' hands at his family dinners out of habit, he puts me on the spot and makes me sing.)

In college I dated a guy for awhile who always bowed his head before he began to eat. I rarely did. By senior year I often ate with friends who began a meal with a "pause for the universe." And after graduation, I got in the habit of "clinking" or "cheersing" or "toasting" the first bite or the first sip of everything with my eating companion before we start our meal.

That's what J and I do most of the time now. But last night, as I sat down to eat the dinner he had made, he took both my hands in an almost-joke. We just looked at each other for a minute, smiling, and then I said, "So... what do we do now?"

"I don't know," he laughed, but didn't let go. Instead, he looked at the shirt I was wearing, the shirt from this year's Roadtrip, and read it out loud. "Soul food. Patience. Goodness. Love. Peace. Joy. Faithfullness."

"Seems fitting," I said.

And then, at the same time, we said Amen.

a fitting snapchat i received while at roadtrip talking about soul food!
posted from Bloggeroid

Sunday, January 26, 2014

all good things: more than one love

All Good Things started as a one-hour Sunday night radio show on KSTO St. Olaf radio, featuring feel-good music and 10 highlights from the past week.

Sit back and enjoy!


1. Song of the week: One Love by Bob Marley. We sang an adapted version of this song at the retreat I went to this weekend, and it was awesome. It's really just a good song all around, and makes you feel alright.

I'm having a really hard time finding a video of Bob Marley singing this, so here's a cover from Playing for Change that seems fitting.

2. Roadtrip. This one is fresh in my memory since I just got back: the ELCA Delaware-Maryland Synod's annual high school retreat. This waas my second year as a small-group leader, and so far it has been very spiritually enriching. More on that in this Wednesday's post...

3. Snow days. We had a snow day and a half this week. I was working from home, but given the bitter cold I did enjoy being able to work in my huge sweatpants for once.

4. Ergonomic office chairs. On the other hand, by the end of a day and a half of working from home, my back and shoulders really appreciated the padded ergonomic office chair I use at work.

5. Ender's Game. I've been working on this book for months (renewed it twice from the library) and finally finished it last night. To avoid spoilers, I'll just say that the plot was compelling, and the twist ending lifted me up with a stroke of idealistic brilliance. Definite recommend for dystopia junkies like myself.

6. Company. I was planning on driving down to Ocean City alone on Friday night, but at the last minute I called my friend Abby, who I haven't seen in awhile, and worked it out to drive down together. It made the trip a lot more enjoyable for both of us, and it was a great opportunity to reconnect with her since I haven't seen her in a few months. She's awesome and I hope this was a catalyst for us to hang out more and get closer in the near future.

7. Chili. My favorite food, and one of J's specialties. When we have days off from work a lot of times "we" make a big pot of it (read: he actually makes it) and pack it up for lunch for the rest of the week. Plus, when it is so cold out it warms me up from the inside.

8. Big D's. Stay with me here. Big D's is a Delaware staple. Dave (D himself) used to have a shop half a mile from my parents' house, but I never went there and it closed this fall. But Big D recently started supplying smoked and grilled meats to the shop where J works, so I got to try ribs for the first time this week, and they were AWESOME.

9. A fellow Ole has had a family mystery (the fun kind of mystery) broadcast on TV, radio, and the internet this week! It's an awesome story and it's been really cool watching her updates on Facebook about it. Check out the Google search results on the story.

10. Prayer. Whatever this means to you, it is important. This week I have prayed for a lot of people: friends who live far away; new friends; myself, my family, people at home; people I've never met; those affected by the Columbia mall shooting. A lot of times I say I will pray for people so they will know that I care about how they are and what they are going through; but this week I felt more than usual that I had offered up these things in prayer and that they were actually lifted. Not completely erased, but the weight of these difficult things changed, and I do believe that, if I said I would pray for you this week, those prayers are being heard by someone. So have hope!



* * * * * * *
Thank you, readers, for being with us tonight, and for giving me reasons to write, and things to write about.

And thanks for joining us every Sunday night! Join the Baby Steps on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/TheBabyStepsSaga for good things every day, and updates on new posts. Come back next week for another reminder of 10 more things to be thankful for!

Until then, be kind to each other, and find a reason to smile!

posted from Bloggeroid

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

one of the lucky ones

Today it's hovering right around zero. With the 20mph winds it must be dipping below. Northern Delaware's roads are covered with a thick sheet of ice topped with snow. 

I'm having flashbacks to J-term on the Hill, particularly sophomore year, when I lived in Thorson and walked 15 minutes to class alone almost every day. I would try desperately to cover every inch of my skin in several layers of clothing, but still ended up with brain freeze after just a minute or two.

* * *
A day or two ago, I was leaving my local YMCA after a morning yoga class when I saw a man digging in an ashtray on the corner across from me. He picked something out of it. A cigarette butt, I guessed, long enough to light again. And then he stuck it in his mouth, digging in his pocket with his other hand. Must have been looking for a lighter.

This is the second time I have watched someone do this in the past few months. The first time was outside my local library, back in late fall when it was just starting to get cold. Before that, this action -- digging in an ashtray for a second-hand cigarette -- did not exist to me.

* * *
The Code Purple night sanctuary has already been enacted in our area several times this winter. When the overnight low dips below 20 degrees Fahrenheit, additional shelters open for those without a place to go.

* * *
Somehow I am surprised, again and again, by the poverty here. I am surprised by the fractured sense of community, the centrifugal force of the city despite grand efforts to pump life back into Wilmington's downtown.

I am repeatedly surprised by the depth of my own privilege. I do not know what it feels like to want a cigarette so badly that I will take a piece of one from an ashtray and relight it, to not even think twice about doing so. I do not know what it feels like to sleep without shelter at 21 degrees. I sometimes forget how lucky I have been to know true community; to have had parents who were present and able to teach me good habits; to have been the recipient of kindness; to have seen things get done against all odds; to have learned and traveled; to have come out of dark places and remained whole.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

all good things: keys to happiness

All Good Things started as a one-hour Sunday night radio show on KSTO St. Olaf radio, featuring feel-good music and 10 highlights from the past week.

Sit back and enjoy!


1. Song of the week: Let Her Go by Passenger. This is the song that has been stuck in my head all week long... probably because it's playing on the radio almost every time I turn it on. After song of the week, I officially name it overplayed.

2. The Princess Bride. My local Regal Cinema is playing classic movies on Sundays and Wednesdays this winter, and last night it was Princess Bride which is one of my all-time favorite movies and the first thing J and I really connected on when he was still just Coffeeshopcrush. So of course we went to see it for date night and it was really cool to see it on the big screen, surrounded by middle-aged couples who were quoting the movie and laughing hysterically the whole time.

3. New shoes. I signed up for the Spartan Sprint again this year, and I thought a new pair of running shoes would be a good way to kick off six months of training. I got some New Balance trail running shoes and took them for a spin around the neighborhood this afternoon. They are awesome.

4. Opus No. 1 by Tim Carleton and Darrick Deel. I turned on NPR this afternoon on the way back from DSW, and This American Life was on with a story about tracking down a song somebody had stuck in his head endlessly. The song ended up being some obscure hold music from Cisco, and it's super 80s and kind of haunting. I put it on repeat while I ran this afternoon and it has a nice feet-on-the-pavement beat to it... With plenty of synth over top.

5. This article from Slate about the "Do What You Love; Love What You Do" mantra. I rarely read an article and find myself or my perspectives immediately changed. But this article made me think, and while I'm not making any rash decisions about my professional life I suspect I will find myself approaching work, and the way I talk about it, differently.

6. Getting back on the horse. My workout routine came this close to extinction through the end of last year, but this week I went to three classes and ran a couple of times. It feels good to get moving again.

7. We got WiFi! Our friends and family have been very concerned about our lack of internet and cable, particularly since we moved. To be honest, I have really enjoyed not having it; but it does make a lot of things hard, and it makes our house less of a draw for friends to come and hang out. So now we have it, and it's been awesome. Now I just have to work on not letting it take over my life...

8. Cleaning. We're mostly moved in to the new place, but there are of course a few things still out of place. So today I did a bunch of actual cleaning, to make way for organizing and nesting that needed to be done. It's not quite finished yet, but I'm really satisfied with the progress I've made.

9. The New Castle Farmers' Market. This place is a local legend in New Castle County where I live, but I have only ever been there on Sundays 'til now, which means the Amish section has always been closed. This time we went on Saturday, and got some great stuff. This includes a couple of delicious New York strip steaks that J then cooked on the charcoal grill that came with our new house. Yummm.

10. Surprising conversations. I went to church this morning, and had a few surprising and really fulfilling conversations with people. I laughed with two people I haven't laughed with before, and talked about happiness and shared perspectives I never expected to share.



* * * * * * *
Thank you, readers, for being with us tonight, and for giving me reasons to write, and things to write about.

And thanks for joining us every Sunday night! Join the Baby Steps on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/TheBabyStepsSaga for good things every day, and updates on new posts. Come back next week for another reminder of 10 more things to be thankful for!

Until then, be kind to each other, and find a reason to smile!

posted from Bloggeroid

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

guest post: big apple zen

Hannah is a fellow Class of 2011 Ole now living and studying for her MSW in New York City. When she first moved into my realistic radius, I invited her down for a "small city" weekend to share a little home. We talked about social responsibility and responsibility to ourselves and finding home and peace in the midst of instability and unfamiliarity. Hannah is a smart, thoughtful woman and I have been eagerly awaiting blog-ready insights from her for months now.

So, brew a cup of tea and enjoy!


I had talked to Clara about being a guest blogger this past summer on a particularly helpful trip to Delaware. I had just moved to New York and was feeling a little overwhelmed, lost, and lonely and my trip to see her provided comfort and some much-needed revitalization.

Since that visit I have thought at length in regards to what I might want to write about. Maybe it’s because I’m in busy with school but every time I sat down to write I had trouble seeing the forest for the trees. My sentences came out long and jumbled and I couldn’t seem to express thoughts with any semblance of clarity.

Because it’s the New Year and because I was just spoiled with an outrageously long winter break, I’m feeling relaxed, inspired and in the mood to take another shot at this guest blogger thing.

The past few weeks in the Midwest taught me something about the beauty of simplicity, which was rather humbling and helpful for a girl occasionally consumed by the glamour and romance of New York City.

My nephew, who is just shy of being one year old, was the guiding force of this revelation. Hanging out with him for copious amounts of time so that my sister and brother-in-law could get some much needed rest allowed me to be goofy and uncomplicated for large portions of the day.

With the exception of time spent getting more cups of coffee, snowshoeing and loading and unloading my parents’ dishwasher, my days were spent reading baby books, blowing raspberries, and hiding behind various objects in pursuit of his peek-a-boo laughter (an especially contagious variety of laughter). When my boyfriend came over, I noticed that he was not immune to this infectious play and I often caught him doing the Macarena or building and subsequently knocking over block towers to induce more fits of giggles.

In a class I once took on mindfulness, my teacher described children as the ultimate Zen Masters. For parents I’m sure this sentiment involves all manner of patience, courage and faith. For me, my nephew was the Zen master of pure and simple joy.

With some intentionality, I hope to bring this wisdom to Manhattan, so that instead of being perceived solely as a student/intern in a competitive rat race, I can present myself as someone who’s willing to lay on the carpet with a bowl on their head while blowing raspberries at an animated 10 month old, because that’s the version of myself in which I feel most authentic.

Don’t get me wrong, my aspirations will and have led me to institutions where professional demeanor is required, but I hope my multi-dimensional presence will be evident no matter where I work or study. And while I am not ready for parenthood, Aunt-hood has come at a valuable time. Not only do I love and cherish my nephew, I also value his teachings on staying put and keeping it simple.

With him my defenses are down and my heart is wide open.


posted from Bloggeroid

Sunday, January 12, 2014

all good things: the secret life

All Good Things started as a one-hour Sunday night radio show on KSTO St. Olaf radio, featuring feel-good music and 10 highlights from the past week. The show, and its current written form, is brought to you by Clara, Second Set of Baby Steps creator, and my radio co-host Cassie. We both contribute things to the list, so I'll tell you who said what to avoid confusion...

Sit back and enjoy!


1. Song of the week: Lake Michigan by Rogue Wave. This song was the musical accompaniment to a gorgeous international travel montage in Walter Mitty. Breathtakingly glorious.

2. The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. J and I watched this movie (#8 in the box office as of Wednesday afternoon) for date night this week, and it was beautiful and inspiring and funny. Definitely recommend. -Clara

3. La Fia. A famous Philly restaurateur opened up this little French bakery in Wilmington this summer, and we've been hearing about the gourmet cheeses for months now. Friday night we went there for dinner with J's siblings and the food and drinks were also delicious. It's fine dining, so not cheap, and small portions - but they really take their flavors and ambiance seriously. -Clara

4. Columbus Inn. Another place I've been wanting to visit for months (if not years). Last night a friend stopped by and she was craving Columbus Inn pizza, so we decided to go out with her. This place also takes mixed drinks seriously; the bartender was an artist and made a pretty killer Old Fashioned. We each ordered a pizza: one Kennett Square with mushrooms and caramelized onions, a tomato basil mozzarella, and a roasted pear and prosciutto with balsamic glaze. All amazing. And the inside was beautiful, with comfortable chairs and soft music, so we could actually hold a conversation. -Clara

5. Massages. J's mom gave me a gift certificate for a Swedish massage for my birthday, and I've been saving it for after the holidays. Yesterday morning I finally got up and went in, and it was amazing. I felt like all the bad stuff was flushed out of my body and I was so dazed for the rest of the day (in a good way). Plus it was a great excuse to take some Me-time. -Clara

6. Luke and I rearranged our living room this week, and I'm loving it. It's great how a little change can be so refreshing. -Cassie

7. Changing a hairstyle. A few weeks ago I chopped quite a few inches off of my hair. It's been tough getting used to it, but I'm definitely glad I did it! -Cassie

8. Fitbit. I've been using a Fitbit for the last few weeks (it's a pedometer that also tracks sleep, etc). Using it has made me realize that I sit way too much everyday so I've started taking short breaks to walk around at work. I feel healthier already! -Cassie

9. Finding old cards people have sent you. I was cleaning out a drawer today and found some really great old cards from friends and family. I paused my cleaning to read through them, and they really brightened my day. -Cassie

10. Red lipstick. I bought some this week which is a big deal for me since I've never owned lipstick before! I've only used it once so far, but I feel like I rocked it. -Cassie

BONUS! This is the official blog announcement: Coffeeshopcrush and I are now engaged! I definitely think that counts... but maybe I'm biased ;)


* * * * * * *
Thank you, readers, for being with us tonight, and for giving me reasons to write, and things to write about.

And thanks for joining us every Sunday night! Join the Baby Steps on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/TheBabyStepsSaga for good things every day, and updates on new posts. Come back next week for another reminder of 10 more things to be thankful for!

Until then, be kind to each other, and find a reason to smile!

posted from Bloggeroid

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

in my time of life (take 2)

This week things are just starting to go back to normal after the holiday season... Ok, so really for the first time since November... Ok, maybe NEVER. But things are going back to being as normal as they get.

Kind of.

Before my grandparents left for home in California this week (delayed, of course) Gramma said, "I enjoy keeping up with your blog. It's hard for me to imagine what life is like for young people in your time of life. And the things that seem important..."

I don't remember her exact words, and I didn't understand what she meant until she wrote me an email:
"I am utterly amazed at the things you have to deal with on a daily basis!  At your age, I was already a mother twice, so my interests and activities were entirely different than yours.  But that occupation was much more ordinary for young people then - and we were in a slower-paced time and place, to be sure.  And I never had to go to work outside the home,  for which I'm eternally thankful.  Sure, there were challenges and hurdles - of different types.  I did earn a little cash watching the neighbor's child while she went to classes - but we had  nothing like the  expenses and liabilities you face - most of them legally required.  Our state college tuition was free (!) Just a few small fees and our books - and the hospital charged something like $100 when the babies were born."
This is a very different life than the one I know now. Of course some of those things are to be expected; we know that things cost more now, and that on average we get married and have kids later. But to a great extent the differences in new adulthood two generations later are attributable not to inflation but to a grand-scale cultural shift.

Originally I thought she meant that this to shall pass, and I felt a little stung, took it as a sign that I should let things go, and not get so hung up on stuff; and maybe, for me, it was that too. But really she just meant that our lives are different, and that we can learn from each other.

And I am becoming more aware that even the lives and experiences of my peers, my high school and college classmates, are different than mine, and more so as we get farther and farther from our walk across the stage in Sköglund gym in May of 2011. My own experiences aren't matching up 100% with what I anticipated when I was 21, and I am always learning and coming to new hurdles and puzzles and gifts that were never there before, that I had never even imagined.

And it is, indeed, an object of amazement.
posted from Bloggeroid

Sunday, January 5, 2014

all good things: new year edition

All Good Things started as a one-hour Sunday night radio show on KSTO St. Olaf radio, featuring feel-good music and 10 highlights from the past week. The show, and its current written form, is brought to you by Clara, Second Set of Baby Steps creator, and my radio co-host Cassie. We both contribute things to the list, so I'll tell you who said what to avoid confusion...

Sit back and enjoy!


1. Song of the week: Counting Stars by OneRepublic.. This song has been stuck in my head for what feels like 6 months now. It's actually pretty impressive how much I still like the song after that long. I like how abstractly relatable it feels.

It may have been song of the week before, but I'm using it again because this week J texted me a long string of nonsense, and I correctly guessed that he had recorded himself singing Counting Stars and texted it to me. Do we spend too much time together?

2. Google Hangouts. This week I have done a lot of touching base with friends, in all kinds of different ways, but I think the Hangout took the cake! It was so easy to talk to two friends at once, and we were all chatting from our phones! Plus there are plenty of opportunities for screenshots of the three of us laughing together. -Clara

3. Maryland Historical Society. On Saturday I had to go to Baltimore for a leadership training. My grandparents have been visiting from California and I have wanted to hang out with them more than I have been able to. So they and my parents met up with me after the training at the Maryland Historical Society, which was awesome, indoors (read: WARM), and also free! I am a history nerd, and MD does have some good history... But I think the crowning exhibit for us was the Furniture Room, which showed off hundreds of years of distinctive regional furniture. Who knew that was a thing? -Clara

4. Red Canoe. I drove down to B-more early so I could have breakfast with my girl before the training. She told me to meet her at this little bookshop-cafe called the Red Canoe. Now, I have always had a thing for bookshop cafes, and this one fulfilled my wildest dreams. Cute, cozy, full of books and sweets and warm things to drink. And of course, bookshop-cafe people are a great kind of people! -Clara

5. Pedicures. I got one today with my good friend and it was so relaxing! Sometimes I don't even realize how much I need to relax until I'm sitting in one place and have to sit still. Also, there was a man next to me getting a pedicure as well. How awesome is that?! -Cassie

6. My car started today! Although that seems pretty simple I was pretty worried about it since it's currently -9 in Minneapolis and will probably get to -20 tonight. Can't take those little things for granted! -Cassie

7. Lazy weekends! Since it's been so frigid I've spent most of the weekend hanging around the apartment. It's so nice to spend some time lounging about with nothing planned. It's also nice to stay in pajamas all day :) -Cassie

8. Getting a new book (to read for fun!) I got 4 for Christmas and am really looking forward to starting one. I'm reading Moby Dick right now for the first time and am really enjoying it :) -Cassie

9. Nesting. The new place is shaping up pretty nicely and feeling like home, but there are still a few things to be done. For one thing, up until Tuesday night, the walls were pretty bare! I've had all these posters waiting to be posted but hanging unframed posters is not a thing in the adult world, so finally I spent some of my Christmas money buying some simple black frames and hung them on the wall! Happy New Year to me! -Clara

10. Things to look forward to. I just signed up for the Spartan Sprint again this year, so training will have to start soon! And then I have made plans to see lots of friends in the near future, and or sit down for a good long chat. And today I went to help pick out the bridesmaid dresses for a friend getting married this summer. More weddings this year; new projects; big changes; a new routine... I'm feeling fresh and ready for bigger and better things!


* * * * * * *
Thank you, readers, for being with us tonight, and for giving me reasons to write, and things to write about.

And thanks for joining us every Sunday night! Join the Baby Steps on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/TheBabyStepsSaga for good things every day, and updates on new posts. Come back next week for another reminder of 10 more things to be thankful for!

Until then, be kind to each other, and find a reason to smile!

posted from Bloggeroid

Thursday, January 2, 2014

not there yet

A few weeks ago my boss called the office on his way into work. Before I picked up the phone to speak with him I took a deep breath, sat up straight, smiled, and pushed some pep into my voice.

He hesitated for a split second and then said, "...Clara?" "Yes, it's me." "Is everything ok? You sound so... upbeat."

"Yeah, I'm working on it," I said.

"But it's not New Year's yet. You didn't want to wait 'til the new year?"

"Nah. I just make resolutions whenever I want. And then when I reach one of them, I make another one."

The Happy Phone Voice is in progress; it's not natural yet, and even with effort I don't quite muster it every time. But I have noticed a change, in the way I feel when I pick up the phone, and in the way people respond to me, and in my general mood.

But I haven't made any "New Year's Resolutions," per se. There are at least a million projects I want to do, and my routine could use a little refresher. I probably have a couple of habits that could get the boot.

I have learned that it is far more effective to do one thing at a time. I'm not always very good at it, but I have noticed a change, in my general productivity and in my success at actually achieving things on a larger scale. I can take care of the thing that is most holding me back first, and then the next step falls into place.

To be fair, with my personality type the work is never done. There is always bettering that can happen, there is always something that could change. Hopefully, I will get better at tackling larger, more impossible tasks. It would be cool for something I do, someday, to make a major impact for a larger community. But I'm not there yet.

You know what else I need to get better at? Sitting still sometimes. Not having something to do for once. Enjoying down time without being nagged by the endless list of To-Do's.

And speaking of being present, this may be the last year of the blog. I know I've been saying this for awhile now, but I'm really running out of things to say. And after being mildly overwhelmed by NaNoWriMo this year, I decided I wanted to save energy for other creative projects, other writing, building, decorating. I'll finish out the third year of baby steps, in May.

And rest assured, I will not go silent.

Thanks for sticking with me this long, friends. Happy New Year. I wish you all contentedness in the year ahead.

posted from Bloggeroid